Some are companies employing journalists: News Corp, chaired by Rupert Murdoch; Berkshire Hathaway Inc., whose CEO is business magnate Warren Buffett; Discovery Communications, creator of the Discovery Channel that is in partnership with Oprah Winfrey for her Oprah Winfrey Network; Amazon.com, headed by Jeff Bezos, who is about to purchase the Washington Post; and Yahoo, whose Yahoo News has been called the most-visited news site on the web.

"The browning of America hasn't extended into the boardrooms of some of America's largest publicly traded corporations — a number that benefit from black consumers to gain market share," Black Enterprise said. It added, "As we developed the following list, our editors reached out to the executive offices or investor relations departments of every company with a series of e-mails and phone calls to gain explanations for the absence of black representation as well as the lack of recruitment effort. We found that 58 of these companies, however, failed to provide us with any response."

The lack of diversity at the top extends beyond the paucity of African Americans.

In August, the Alliance for Board Diversity, representing black, Hispanic and Asian Pacific American groups, reported that "women and minorities have made no real gains in the boardrooms of corporate America. The ABD is a collaboration of four leadership organizations: Catalyst, The Executive Leadership Council (ELC), the Hispanic Association on Corporate Responsibility (HACR), and Leadership Education for Asian Pacifics, Inc. (LEAP)."

A news release said, "According to the report, Missing Pieces: Women and Minorities on Fortune 500 Boards, 2012 Alliance for Board Diversity Census, in the Fortune 100, women and minorities remain vastly underrepresented at the decision-making tables of corporate boardrooms, with white/Caucasian men comprising nearly 70 percent of the 1,214 seats. The trend is similar in the Fortune 500, with white/Caucasian men accounting for 73.3 percent of the total 5,488 board seats. Overall, there have been only very small gains in boardroom representation since the first ABD census of Fortune 100 board directors in 2004.

"Women and minorities also continue to be underrepresented in leadership roles in boardrooms. Among the five major categories assessed — Board chair, lead director, audit committee chair, nomination/governance committee chair, and compensation committee chair — women and minority men experienced small increases in leadership positions on boards. Minority women were the only group that did not make any gains in leadership positions.

" 'We continue to find the research troubling because the ABD believes in the business proposition that when diversity leads, business succeeds. We know that in order to sustain long-term success, companies must continually create new ideas and solutions,' stated ELC President and CEO Ronald C. Parker. 'This innovation is driven by diversity of thinking at every level of the organization, especially within senior leadership teams and in the boardroom. Women and minorities are an important part of that equation.' . . . "

Despite the absence of African Americans on their boards, some of the media companies cited show other evidence of diversity. At Google, for example, David C. Drummond, an African American, is senior vice president, corporate development and chief legal officer.

News Corp, whose properties include Dow Jones, the New York Post and HarperCollins Publishers, was a "presenting sponsor" of last month's Asian American Journalists Association convention in New York. (Fox News and the Fox broadcast network, as well as the 20th Century Fox movie studio, were spun off from News Corp this year and trade under the name 21st Century Fox.)

With no trace of irony, the company said in a full-page ad in a program booklet, "At News Corp, we appreciate the importance of creating an environment in which all of our employees can feel valued, included and empowered to bring great ideas to the table."

The National Association of Hispanic Journalists "will not be participating in the election" for president of Unity: Journalists for Diversity this month, NAHJ President Hugo Balta told Journal-isms on Wednesday, because the election by the Unity board will take place before NAHJ decides its future relationship with the coalition.

"We have communicated to Unity that the NAHJ reps will not participate in any meeting of Unity until the NAHJ board definitely decides" NAHJ's role in the coalition, Balta said.

Michele Salcedo, the immediate past NAHJ president, said in a Facebook discussion that she disagrees. "The bottom line: you can't effect change unless you are part of the discussion in good faith. And, despite assurances to the contrary, NAHJ has, in its coordinated absence from the board, de facto pulled out without so much as consulting the board or the membership," she said.

NAHJ has four votes on the board, as do the Asian American Journalists Association, the Native American Journalists Association and the National Lesbian & Gay Journalists Association, the other coalition partners.

At its national convention last month in Anaheim, Calif., Balta indicted the structure of Unity, saying it was unfair for the larger Unity groups to have the same number of votes as the smaller ones. Balta said his efforts to change the structure have gotten nowhere.

"We're frustrated, and we've got to act," Balta told his members. He said that two years after the National Association of Black Journalists left the coalition over the same reasons of finances, governance, transparency and mission that have made NAHJ unhappy, "there hasn't been a definitive change."

Doris Truong, acting president of Unity, told Journal-isms that the board planned to vote this month. She said on Facebook Wednesday, "The concerns raised by NAHJ (and NABJ) are shared by everyone on the UNITY board. We have been attempting since June to reach a consensus on how to move forward. Now that convention season is over, I hope we'll be able to focus on the issues at hand.

"As was posted Aug. 29, UNITY is working to elect a president. That is the first order of business before we can productively continue other discussions because we need a full Executive Committee in place before undertaking any changes in the governance structure. . . ."

Mary Hudetz, president of the Native American Journalists Association, heads the Unity nominating committee. "I formally opened up the call for nominations for UNITY president on Monday, with the goal of finishing the process by the last week of September," Hudetz said by email. Truong did not respond when asked whether she planned to seek the Unity presidency. There are no declared candidates, Hudetz said.

Balta said of Unity, "They want to do business as usual" and that "delaying it (the election) a couple of weeks" would not be detrimental. He said that the NAHJ board would review information he had requested from Unity and that members then would discuss NAHJ's participation in the coalition in a town hall meeting.

He said NAHJ has continued talks with NABJ about a joint convention in 2016, the same year Unity is scheduled to meet.

"We're excited that Harvard Kennedy School's Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy launched the Riptide project to document the downturn in journalism in the last 30 years. This is a ripe area of research and a vibrant democracy depends on a foundation of public-service journalism.

"We're disappointed and frustrated that out of more than 60 thought leaders interviewed by the researchers, only two were people of color and five were women. The vast majority of people interviewed were over the age of 40.

" 'Diversity means representing a multitude of life experiences, so it's disheartening to see that something called a "project on media and lack of diversity" draws mostly from homogenous sources,' said Doris Truong, acting UNITY president. 'As UNITY pointed out last year, journalism has a history built from a rich cast.'

"The Shorenstein Center has expressed interest in doing another round of interviews. While we believe diversity is more than an appendix to the last 30 years, here are journalism and technology leaders we recommend for interviews: Marissa Mayer, CEO of Yahoo; Mi-Ai Parrish, publisher of The Kansas City Star; Dori Maynard, president of the Maynard Institute for Journalism [Education]; Ben Huh, founder of Cheezburger Network; and Greg Moore, editor of the Denver Post. We would be happy to provide more. . . . "

"Riptide was always intended to be an organic project that would be expanded over time with other voices exploring more and more parts of this story. That's why we created it as a website. We welcome suggestions for voices or topics that could now be added to Riptide. People should feel encouraged to send them to us via shorenstein_center@hks.harvard.edu."

"But an exclusive CNN/ORC International survey of speech-watchers conducted immediately after the conclusion of Obama's address also indicates that those who tuned into the address were split on whether the president made the case for military action against Syria.

"Sixty percent of those questioned said it was not in the national interests of the U.S. to be involved in the bloody two year old Syrian civil war, and more than half said the speech did not change their confidence in the president's leadership on military and international issues. . . ."

"Gupta, CNN's chief medical correspondent, has been reporting on the conditions facing Syrian refugees. . . . He has been visiting refugee camps along the Syria-Lebanon border, and reported from a camp in Lebanon's Bekaa Valley on Monday.

"Speaking from Beirut on Tuesday, he told The Huffington Post that those refugees deserved more coverage.

" 'We don't hear enough about who the people are who are really being affected,' Gupta said when asked to assess news coverage about Syria. 'We hear the numbers — 100,000 dead, 1,400 people were gassed — and we hear those as big headlines, but when you meet some of these people, I think that really brings it home.'

"The camps, he added, were 'among the worst that [he has] seen' in terms of quality and sustainability in costs and supplies,' " adding that the refugees' experiences are more complex than what people at home may see in the media.

"Besides a picture on the front of the Wall Street Journal, and a teaser on the bottom of the New York Daily News, the papers focused on two stories: Bill de Blasio's victory in the city's Democratic primary and President Obama's speech about the ongoing situation in Syria. . . "

"Across 11 Muslim publics surveyed by the Pew Research Center, a median of 67% say they are somewhat or very concerned about Islamic extremism. In five countries — Pakistan, Jordan, Tunisia, Turkey and Indonesia — Muslim worries about extremism have increased in the past year. . . ."

Pacifica Radio's "Democracy Now!" and the Associated Press reminded listeners and readers that Sept. 11 was also the anniversary of the 1973 coup led by army Gen. Augusto Pinochet against Salvador Allende, Chile's first Marxist president.

"As Tokyo bureau chief, Moritsugu will oversee text coverage and operations in Japan and work closely with colleagues in photos and video to coordinate AP's report across all media platforms. He succeeds Malcolm Foster, who has transferred to AP's Asia-Pacific headquarters in Bangkok as an editor.

"Since joining the AP as enterprise editor based in Bangkok in 2007, Moritsugu has overseen major projects and in-depth, investigative and data journalism throughout the Asia-Pacific region. . . ."

He is also the son of Henry Moritsugu, assistant news editor at Newsday.

The CNN reporter and anchor "debuted his new segment on the Tom Joyner Morning Show Tuesday, talking about a topic he's grown comfortable discussing as of late: the issues within the black community. He insisted that the burden of leadership in the community has shifted. . . ."

Lemon's segment is to air Tuesdays and Thursdays at 7:16 a.m. Eastern time. He said on Tuesday, "I want you to ask yourself the last time you heard a young person walking around singing a church hymn. [Audio]

"Because just yesterday, just yesterday, I'm walking on St. Nicholas Avenue, two separate young men were singing a French Montana rap song: "N- Ain't worried about nothing." You know that song?" N- Ain't worried about nothing," right? They actually say the word. They're walking with their headphones on, their screaming on St. Nicholas Avenue.

"So that's why in my work as a journalist, I constantly challenge and urge the rap, hip-hop and music powerbrokers to step on to the stage of positive influence and into the fulfillment of Dr. [Martin Luther] King's dream, because whether they realize it or not they are the new breed, they are the new black leaders. They are the influences of our time. And I don't mean that I challenge them in a negative way. I mean that in the best possible way, that their names can too be one day be worthy of boulevards, and avenues, and streets. . . ."

"Who's a journalist?" Michigan-based Steve Neavling asked Wednesday on motorcitymuckraker.com. "According to a bill before the state House, it's solely someone who works for a newspaper or FCC-licensed radio or TV station. If passed, reporters who write strictly for on-line news organizations, such as Deadline Detroit, MLive and Huffington Post, would be denied access to some police records. . . . " Such a law could set a negative precedent, Neavling argued.

Richard Prince's Journal-isms originates from Washington and is published Monday, Wednesday and Friday. It began in print before most of us knew what the Internet was, and it would like to be referred to as a "column." For newcomers: The words in blue (on most computers) are links leading to more information. The Web site BugMeNot.com provides passwords and user names to some registration-only news sites, but use may be illegal in some states. Any views expressed in the column are those of the person or organization quoted and not those of any other entity.

Your tax-deductible contribution will help us carry out Dori's vision of fair, accurate and equitable media for all segments of society.

Sponsor MIJE

Sign up for weekly info on jobs, industry insights, diversity matters and more.

Email: *

Work We <3 | FDP

Instead of spending all our time calling out journalism that doesn't work, we want to find work we like. We'd like to encourage our readers to submit links to content that is moving or challenging and that goes beyond the standard narrative either at the level of form or content. In other words, we want to see journalism that works.

We're particularly interested in work at the nexus of the following categories: